Scientists analyse seismic waves from Japan’s 2011 earthquake that reached deep into the Earth and may have been linked to subtle postseismic ground movement of a few millimeters

A decade after Japan's massive 2011 earthquake, scientists discovered seismic waves travelled to Earth's core, bounced back, and triggered tiny crustal movements across the nation. This core-reflected wave, strong enough to coincide with fault slips, highlights a previously underestimated interaction between deep Earth energy and stressed fault networks, potentially impacting seismic hazard models.

Scientists analyse seismic waves from Japan’s 2011 earthquake that reached deep into the Earth and may have been linked to subtle postseismic ground movement of a few millimeters
A decade after Japan's massive 2011 earthquake, scientists discovered seismic waves travelled to Earth's core, bounced back, and triggered tiny crustal movements across the nation. This core-reflected wave, strong enough to coincide with fault slips, highlights a previously underestimated interaction between deep Earth energy and stressed fault networks, potentially impacting seismic hazard models.